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Friday, January 26, 2018

Shape of human brain evolved over time

Mind bender: 

While brain size in Homo sapiens remained largely unchanged over time, the shape gradually became more rounded until achieving its current form, say scientists
Brain shape evolution in Homo sapiens are shown in this combination image—the 300,000 year-old cranium Jebel Irhoud 1 (L) and present day humans (R)—in this undated handout image released on 24 January, 2018. Photo: Reuters
Washington: An analysis of fossils including the oldest-known Homo sapiens specimen has revealed that brain shape in our species evolved over time to become less elongated and more globular, a change that appears to have accommodated key advances in its function.
Scientists said on Wednesday they examined brain size and shape based on 20 Homo sapiens fossils, with the oldest dating back to roughly 300,000 years ago. While brain size remained largely unchanged over time, the shape gradually became more rounded until achieving its current form between 100,000 and 35,000 years ago, they said.
Physical anthropologist Simon Neubauer of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany said two features that contributed to the globular shape stand out: the bulging of the brain’s parietal areas and the cerebellum.
“The parietal lobe is an important hub in connecting different brain regions and involved in functions like orientation, attention, sensorimotor transformations underlying planning and visuospatial integration,” said Neubauer, who led the study published in the journal Science Advances.
“The cerebellum is involved in motor-related functions like the coordination of movements and balance, but also in functions like working memory, language, social cognition and affective (emotional) processing,” Neubauer added.
Neubauer said brain globularity emerges developmentally in today’s humans during a few months around the time of birth.
“Our new data, therefore, suggest evolutionary changes to early brain development in a critical and vulnerable period for neural wiring and cognitive development,” Neubauer added.
The time period for when the brain’s current shape emerged is in harmony with archaeological evidence that humans achieved what he called “the full suite of behavioural modernity” around 40,000 to 50,000 years ago, Neubauer said.
This includes “material indicators of manipulation of symbols and abstract thought” such as creation of art and ornamentation, use of pigments, burying the dead, complex multi-component tools and bone carvings, Neubauer added.
The earliest-known Homo sapiens fossils, from a site in Morocco dating to about 300,000 years ago and a site in Ethiopia dating to about 195,000 years old, possessed elongated brains resembling those of Neanderthals, our species’ closest relative that went extinct tens of thousands of years ago, while later ones become rounder.
The researchers analysed Homo sapiens fossils from north, east and south Africa, the Middle East and Europe.
“Our findings add to the accumulating archeological and paleoanthropological evidence demonstrating that Homo sapiens is an evolving species with deep African roots and long-lasting gradual changes in behavioural modernity, brain organisation and potentially brain function,” Neubauer said.
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